Rubio was asked to speak, according to a press release, because of his accomplishments as an attorney and statesman, his faithfulness to the teachings of the Catholic Church and his recognition as a rising figure in American politics.Since I'm not sure that Rubio is a practicing Catholic, I don't think that he should be lauded as being faithful to the teachings of the Catholic Church. Don't get me wrong - I think Rubio is great - but let's be careful praising him for Catholic fidelity if that is not the case.
FUMARE
Law, culture, and Catholicism...up in smoke!
Friday, February 25, 2011
Marco Rubio At 2011 Ave Maria Law Commencement
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Ave Maria Law Backs Out Of Transparency Promise
1. The Law School Transparency site has all the details. And here is Law School Transparency's take:
When Ave Maria originally agreed to comply with the LST Standard, it admitted that the school was not in the practice of providing adequate employment information to prospective students. By waiting until the ABA dictates what Ave Maria must disclose, the school now acknowledges that it is willing to keep its prospective students in the dark.Ouch.
2. The National Law Journal has an article here, with quotes from Dean Milhizer.
3. A choice quote from Above the Law's commentary:
Guys, this is my bad. I made a mistake. You see, back in September, Ave Maria School of Law said it was going to do something. And me, silly fool that I am, believed them. I know, I know, I’m an idiot. What kind of person actually believes Ave Maria will keep its word?......Ouch again.
It's just amazing to me when an institution of higher education can’t even keep its word....
4. Here is the Fumare article back in September reporting on Ave Maria Law's decision to join Law School Transparency. In the comments, "The Curling Coach" said: "This may be the first time ever that AMSL and transparency are mentioned in the same sentence."
I guess it was too good to be true.
Fumed by Thales at 10:44 AM. |
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Above the Law to AMSL: Cowards!
Fumed by Petronius at 1:19 PM. |
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Monaghan To Step Down As AMU's CEO
Monaghan will retain a role as something of a figurehead and public face of Ave MariaI wonder how much control Monaghan will continue to exert over AMU's future. All of it, I suspect, as Monaghan is still Chancellor and still controls the purse strings. See Ave Maria School of Law.
Monaghan has had a lifelong interest in architecture, and he said he intends to keep employing that interest through designs for future buildings at the school.Oh noes! More Frank Lloyd Wright knock-offs!
Wednesday, February 02, 2011
Michael Novak Laments Ave Maria's Loss Of Jackson Labs
Fortunately, Novak doesn't stoop as low as that in his most recent Ave Maria article, "Postcard from Florida," but I still find his article disappointing. Novak first praises the new marble Annunciation relief that was placed on the Ave Maria oratory. I'm sure that the sculpture is quite beautiful, but I was amused at Novak's accolades:
Trumpets! Jubilation! That is the mood I felt on watching the last few large blocks of heavy marble being lifted into place on the gothic archway, as the light of the fading sunset reddened the pure white stone, and bystanders and workers cheered in relief after days and days of suspense. The total weight of the marble exceeds 60 tons. One mistake, one sagging line, and the whole project might have been ruined for a long time.Heh. Is it wrong for me to think that the whole project has been ruined for a long time because of its unfortunate placement on an ugly piece of church architecture?
Novak's article becomes more disappointing when he discusses Ave Maria's loss of Jackson Labs. Novak first says that AMU Professor "Waldstein recently delivered a stirring public defense" of Jackson Labs. I guess Novak didn't read my rebuttal of Waldstein's position. Novak then gives this reason for lamenting the loss of Jackson Labs:
Jackson Labs seems to be moving elsewhere. Some of the faculty here regard this as a great opportunity lost. These visionaries are longing for opportunities to pioneer a new way of addressing new technologies and new empirical methods of inquiry. They hope not to bury their heads in the sand regarding these questions, and not to avoid them, but to study the issues from a fresh Catholic point of view. Indeed, most of those at AMU hope to make the university an institution of exploration and creativity, not simply an institution of retreat from the world.......Novak misses the point, like so many others. The issue is not whether Catholics can engage with Jackson Labs; the issue is whether it is morally permissible to cooperate with Jackson Labs by selling a land interest for a new facility and by publicly encouraging and inviting Jackson Labs to expand to Ave Maria. And contrary to Novak's claim that moral concerns about Jackson Labs are "speculative" because the concerns are about non-existent human embryonic stem cell research that might happen in the future, moral concerns aren't speculative as they rest on Jackson Labs's current practice of marketing services and resources specifically for HESC research and conducting HESC research workshops and demonstrations.
On the scientific front, let us hope we shall have another opportunity to engage the best scientific explorers in the nation "up close and personal."
Luckily for those who supported the Jackson Labs facility in Ave Maria, with the Ave Maria deal falling apart, they can now avoid having to resolve the moral quandaries raised by their cooperation with Jackson Labs.
© 2007 FUMARE

